View attachment 553933Looks like my fan is 3,300 CFM. I don’t have any experience to compare to so I don’t know if that is sufficient or inadequate? Daubie can you confirm that the 4.0 clutch and fan will fit the hemi water pump. If so I may try to remove my e-fan and shroud and install the 4.0 shroud and clutch fan just to see if that will help since it won’t cost anything except time lol
View attachment 553933Looks like my fan is 3,300 CFM. I don’t have any experience to compare to so I don’t know if that is sufficient or inadequate? Daubie can you confirm that the 4.0 clutch and fan will fit the hemi water pump. If so I may try to remove my e-fan and shroud and install the 4.0 shroud and clutch fan just to see if that will help since it won’t cost anything except time lol
View attachment 553933Looks like my fan is 3,300 CFM. I don’t have any experience to compare to so I don’t know if that is sufficient or inadequate? Daubie can you confirm that the 4.0 clutch and fan will fit the hemi water pump. If so I may try to remove my e-fan and shroud and install the 4.0 shroud and clutch fan just to see if that will help since it won’t cost anything except time lol
I’ve often thought about that. Conventional wisdom is that there is enough air flow at highway speed that the fan is not needed. My (unvalidated) thought is that the Jeep is enough of an air dam that there is not enough airflow at speed to overcome the additional heat generated by the engine keeping the brick moving.
Bottom line, I don’t know the answer to your question, Blue. But I have no excuse because in my setup I have an override switch that turns off the fan, such as when fjording, etc. I should get out on the highway, turn off the fan, and see what happens. For science.
That said, my rig is certainly not a typical example, because it makes a crazy amount of heat.
...
You should do that and see. I'll bet that fan isn't doing anything above about 40. It's going to be 95 here today, and you're not that far away, you should go get ice cream and test that theory.
So at least in my rig, with my setup, the fan has to be running on the highway to keep the big mill cool. Again, sample of 1, but I'm sure not gonna be turnin' my fan off while runnin' down the hghway any time soon...
Jeff:
I don’t know if your rig has A/C or not, but if so, was your A/C on the entire time of your testing? The condenser’s heat transfer can really affect radiator performance. I have a car with a crappy aftermarket radiator, and it performs so much worse than the OEM one (no longer available) that when ambient temps are in the high 90s or above, I have to turn the temperature control down to keep the car from overheating, and this only occurs at road speeds above about 70MPH.
That's interesting. I've driven a few cars with no fan, and the only issue was you couldn't stop or creep along. They were fine as long as the air was moving with some speed.
I have A/C, and it was off. Neither here nor there for this, but with the A/C on, there is a relay which overrides the fan controller, and the fan runs constantly. My OFF-bypass is wired such that it turns off the fan even with the A/C on.
OK - For science (copywrite credit to @jjvw )...
Now granted, this is a sample of 1. And although not even close to being in @sab 's engineering league, here is my shot.
I took the rig out for a drive on the highway to test the no fan needed theory. Normally around town, the Hemi stays very consistently right around 183. The ambient temp today is 93. As expected, this is the engine temp during a 20-minute drive (under 40 mph) out to the highway (this is an autometer ODBII gauge running on my phone):
View attachment 553983
Normally running on the highway, it runs up to about 190, or a bit above. So I hit the highway, nice and flat, and 70 mph. This is the consistent reading after running about 20 minutes.
View attachment 553988
At this point, I hit the switch to turn off the fan. After a minute or two, it started climbing. After 3-5 minutes it hit 220, and was still climbing:
View attachment 554017
Now I'm dedicated to you boys and all, but I'm not overheating the rig just to make a point - not even for science!
So I turned the fan back on, and it slowly leveled out and began to fall. After perhaps 5 minutes it was back down below 200:
View attachment 554011
And after another 10 minutes or so, it was back down close to 190:
View attachment 554013
At this point, I shut off the fan again to validate the result. Which was the same.
So at least in my rig, with my setup, the fan has to be running on the highway to keep the big mill cool. Again, sample of 1, but I'm sure not gonna be turnin' my fan off while runnin' down the hghway any time soon...
This thing puts almost 400 ponies to the tires on the dyno (to the 40" tires...), and as a result it makes a crazy amount of heat. Again, I may be a sample of 1 here.
That's interesting. I've driven a few cars with no fan, and the only issue was you couldn't stop or creep along. They were fine as long as the air was moving with some speed.
I'd always been under the assumption that once you were above a certain speed that the fan wasn't needed anymore either. This might apply to stock rigs? We'll have to see what mine does once I've got it running.
Me too. I know on some of the 3/4 ton trucks I owned in the past the fans would lock up when needed and freespool at times, normally when moving faster.
Thanks for that “science experiment”. It really makes me think (hope) the electric fan is the problem. I rounded up the pieces to put the 4.0 fan and clutch on the Hemi, including the original shroud. I measured my radiator core at 2.625” thick but I don’t know if it is a 2 core, 3 core or what. I think I’ll have room for the mechanical fan. Maybe. On a side note I figured I’d try something quick and easy so I plugged in the laptop and forced it in open loop and added 20% to my VE tables above 1200rpm to make it really rich when cruising at 2200rpm and went for a drive. Within 5 miles at 60 mph it was 235 degrees. I may try advancing the timing today before I tear into the fan and shroud. The only other vehicle I had do something similar to this was a 305 Camaro. It would run fine at 40mph but if was running highway speeds (60-70) then it would overheat. It was a bad head gasket. I really hope my newly rebuilt Hemi doesn’t have combustion gasses getting into the coolant. Thanks for all the help y’all.
Thanks for that “science experiment”. It really makes me think (hope) the electric fan is the problem. I rounded up the pieces to put the 4.0 fan and clutch on the Hemi, including the original shroud. I measured my radiator core at 2.625” thick but I don’t know if it is a 2 core, 3 core or what. I think I’ll have room for the mechanical fan. Maybe. On a side note I figured I’d try something quick and easy so I plugged in the laptop and forced it in open loop and added 20% to my VE tables above 1200rpm to make it really rich when cruising at 2200rpm and went for a drive. Within 5 miles at 60 mph it was 235 degrees. I may try advancing the timing today before I tear into the fan and shroud. The only other vehicle I had do something similar to this was a 305 Camaro. It would run fine at 40mph but if was running highway speeds (60-70) then it would overheat. It was a bad head gasket. I really hope my newly rebuilt Hemi doesn’t have combustion gasses getting into the coolant. Thanks for all the help y’all.
Thanks for that “science experiment”. It really makes me think (hope) the electric fan is the problem. I rounded up the pieces to put the 4.0 fan and clutch on the Hemi, including the original shroud. I measured my radiator core at 2.625” thick but I don’t know if it is a 2 core, 3 core or what. I think I’ll have room for the mechanical fan. Maybe. On a side note I figured I’d try something quick and easy so I plugged in the laptop and forced it in open loop and added 20% to my VE tables above 1200rpm to make it really rich when cruising at 2200rpm and went for a drive. Within 5 miles at 60 mph it was 235 degrees. I may try advancing the timing today before I tear into the fan and shroud. The only other vehicle I had do something similar to this was a 305 Camaro. It would run fine at 40mph but if was running highway speeds (60-70) then it would overheat. It was a bad head gasket. I really hope my newly rebuilt Hemi doesn’t have combustion gasses getting into the coolant. Thanks for all the help y’all.
I don't know if it's even possible to put the head gaskets on improperly and maybe block some water passages. I know there are some engines where that's possible and can cause overheating issues..
Just a thought, probably not the case..
You might also drain and refill it again to see if maybe it does have some trapped air.. That alone can give you lots of problems.
Did you use one of those fill kits that's supposed to help purge all the air when you filled it this time.?
